At this rate, every other street in Argentina will be named after Nestor Kirchner!

We Cubans know a thing or two about “el culto”.

Take a good look at Argentina and you will notice that just about everything is named after a guy named Nestor.

Of course, we are talking about former President Nestor Kirchner who was followed by his wife, the current President Cristina Fernandez.

According to Andres Oppenheimer, “the cult of personality” is alive and well in Latin America:

“In Venezuela, where the late President Hugo Chávez started the latest cycle of personality cult in the region, President Nicolás Maduro is distributing millions of school textbooks glorifying Chávez and himself.
The Maduro government is supplying schools with an Illustrated Constitution of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, which carries among others illustrations a smiling, handsome-looking Chávez playing with children under the headline “Supreme Happiness.”
Another illustration shows a God-like Chávez watching from the sky, while an imposing Maduro, wearing a presidential sash with the country’s national colors, raises his hand in triumph. The headline of the illustration reads “Democracy.”
In Ecuador, President Rafael Correa, whose party is now seeking to change the constitution to allow for his indefinite reelection, is not only censoring press criticism but demanding that newspapers say nice things about him.
Earlier this month, Ecuador’s government Information and Communication Office started legal procedures against the dailies El Universo, El Comercio and Hoy for failing to report about Correa’s recent trip to receive an honorary degree in Chile. Correa himself had denounced in a May 17 speech the lack of press coverage of his trip to Chile and asked his supporters to take legal actions against the newspapers, according to Ecuador’s Fundamedios press freedom advocacy group.
In Bolivia, President Evo Morales recently presented a children’s book entitled Little Evo’s Adventures, glorifying his childhood.
The book, written by former top presidential aide Alejandra Claros Borda, includes five short stories — including Little Evo Goes to School, Little Evo Plays Soccer and Little Evo and the Three-Color Donkey— and has been partially distributed to schoolchildren by Bolivia’s Ministry of Communications.
In Argentina, President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner has named so many streets, bridges and buildings after her late husband, former President Néstor Kirchner, that daily Clarin journalist Leonardo Mindez has created a blog named “Put Néstor’s name to everything.”
The blog includes nearly 100 public works that carry the late president’s name, including the country’s Atucha II nuclear plant, which has just been renamed — you guessed it — “President Néstor Kirchner.” In addition, the government has spent more on pro-Kirchner propaganda during soccer games on TV than on health or education, critics say.”

This is insane and it’s time to stop it.  It’s one thing to name an airport after a former president, JFK in NY City, or an expressway, like Bush in Dallas.

It’s quite another to engage in this kind of self promotion.

It hurts “the rule of law”!

Check out my blog for more stories….

 

 

An Iranian Madrassa for Recruiting Hispanic Students

A few days ago Alberto pointed out a report that officials here in the U.S. are not paying enough attention to Iran’s growing relationship with Cuba and Latin America. And we already know groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah have been in South and Central America and Mexico for several years now, training radical groups in those areas, and even the Mexican drug cartels … not to mention reports of OTMs crossing the border into the U.S..

Now comes this from the Washington Post

The Mexican law student was surprised by how easy it was to get into Iran two years ago. By merely asking questions about Islam at a party, he managed to pique the interest of Iran’s top diplomat in Mexico. Months later, he had a plane ticket and a scholarship to a mysterious school in Iran as a guest of the Islamic Republic.

Next came the start of classes and a second surprise: There were dozens of others just like him.

“There were 25 or 30 of us in my class, all from Latin America,” recalled the student, who was just 19 when he arrived at the small institute that styled itself an Iranian madrassa for Hispanics. “I met Colombians, Venezuelans, multiple Argentines.” Many were new Muslim converts, he said, and all were subject to an immersion course, in perfect Spanish, in what he described as “anti-Americanism and Islam.”

The student, whose first name is Carlos but who spoke on the condition that his full name not be used, left for home only three months later. But his brief Iranian adventure provides a window into an unusual outreach program by Iran, one that targets young adults from countries south of the U.S. border. In recent years, the program has brought hundreds of Latin Americans to Iran for intensive Spanish-language instruction in Iranian religion and culture, much of it supervised by a man who is wanted internationally on terrorism charges, according to U.S. officials and experts.

They describe the program as part of a larger effort by Iran to expand its influence in the Western Hemisphere by building a network of supporters and allies in America’s backyard. The initiative includes not only the recruitment of foreign students for special study inside Iran, but also direct outreach to Latin countries through the construction of mosques and cultural centers and, beginning last year, a new cable TV network that broadcasts Iranian programming in Spanish.

Regional experts say such “soft power” initiatives are mainly political, intended in particular to strengthen Tehran’s foothold in countries such as Venezuela and Ecuador, which share similar anti-American views. But in some cases, Iranian officials have sought to enlist Latin Americans for espionage and even hacking operations targeting U.S. computer systems, according to U.S. and Latin American law-enforcement and intelligence officials.

A report issued in May by an Argentine prosecutor cited evidence of “local clandestine intelligence networks” organized by Iran in several South American countries. The document accused Tehran of using religious and cultural programs as cover to create a “capability to provide logistic, economic and operative support to terrorist attacks decided by the Islamic regime.”

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